Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 737South Africa
Waterkloof Boulevard Homeowners Association (Association Incorporated under Section 21) v Yusuf and Another (028945/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 737 (28 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
28 August 2023
Headnotes
judgment against the respondents on 27 October 2020 due to their failure to pay levy amounts due to the applicant. In this application, the applicant seeks the provisional sequestration of the respondents' estate.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Waterkloof Boulevard Homeowners Association (Association Incorporated under Section 21) v Yusuf and Another (028945/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 737 (28 August 2023)
Waterkloof Boulevard Homeowners Association (Association Incorporated under Section 21) v Yusuf and Another (028945/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 737 (28 August 2023)
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sino date 28 August 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 028945/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
28 August 2023
SIGNATURE:
E VAN DER SCHYFF
In
the matter between:
WATERKLOOF
BOULEVARD HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION
(ASSOCIATION
INCORPORATED UNDER SECTION 21)
APPLICANT
and
BEVERLYN
RUTH
YUSUF
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE
ESTATE LATE SAMUEL SUNDAY YUSUF
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant is a homeowner’s
association that levies certain payments against the account of its
members for, amongst others,
the administration of the association,
security, and upkeep in its area of business. The respondents are the
lawful owners of an
immovable property situated within the
applicant's business area. Levies were raised against the account of
the respondents.
[2]
The first respondent is the executor of the
second respondent. The first respondent and her late husband were
married in community
of property. It is evident that the first
respondent is struggling to finalise the estate of her late husband.
This in itself,
however, does not justify the respondents’
sequestration.
[3]
The applicant obtained summary judgment
against the respondents on 27 October 2020 due to their failure to
pay levy amounts due
to the applicant. In this application, the
applicant seeks the provisional sequestration of the respondents'
estate.
The first respondent
indicated that she is not in a position to obtain legal
representation since the attorneys of record who assisted
her since
the inception of the litigation on a pro bono basis could not
continue to assist her on a
pro bono
basis. To facilitate the
finalization of this application and to provide the respondents with
a fair hearing, I requested advocate
H. Marais to represent the
respondents on a
pro bono
basis. The court is indebted to
advocate Marais for honouring the request.
Legal Requirements
[4]
It
is trite that to succeed with a sequestration application, a creditor
must establish a claim against the debtor, that the respondent
is
insolvent or committed an act of insolvency, that there is reason to
believe that the sequestration will be to the advantage
of creditors
if the debtor's estate is sequestrated.
[1]
[5]
However,
A court is not bound to grant a final sequestration order even if the
court is satisfied that the proper case has been
made out but has the
discretion to grant or refuse a sequestration order.
[2]
Discussion
[6]
I am aware that a provisional liquidation
order is sought, but with the respondents being party to the
proceedings, the court is
already
au
fait
with both sides' version and
evidence.
[7]
It is common cause that the respondents'
estate is a judgment debtor of the applicant, and that the judgment
date remains unsatisfied.
Due to the finding I come to regarding the
third requirement, the advantage to creditors, it is not necessary to
determine whether
the respondents committed an act of insolvency.
[8]
The main issue for determination is whether
the applicants succeeded in making out the case that there is reason
to believe that
it will be to the advantage of creditors of the
debtor if the estate is sequestrated.
[9]
As
I indicated to counsel representing the applicant, I find it
difficult to understand why the applicant did not proceed with the
attachment of the respondents' immovable property and its sale
instead of the present proceedings. Burger J stated in
Mamacos
v Davids:
[3]
'This (the attachment and
sale of the property) would be to his own advantage in that he does
not have to incur the further costs
of sequestration, especially as
he already has a judgment of the Court.'
[10]
In
Gardee
v Dhanmanta Holdings and Others,
[4]
Didcott J dealt with the question as to whether there is reason to
believe that the sequestration of a partnership would be to
the
advantage of the partnership's creditors. He explained:
'While there may be no
reason in principle why a debtor with only one creditor should not
have his estate sequestrated, the potential
advantages in that
situation are inherently fewer, and the case for it is
correspondingly weaker. Then it is really no more than
an elaborate
means of execution, and because of its costs, an expensive one too.
That the applicant himself is convinced of its
benefits to him is not
decisive, even when he is the only creditor. It is for the court to
decide the question…. What is
more, he must demonstrate some
reasonable expectation that it will exceed the likely proceeds of
ordinary execution. Unless he
does that, the laborious and
substantially more expensive remedy of sequestration can hardly be
thought advantageous.'
[11]
Didcott
J elaborated:
[5]
'
Sequestration,
it is true, has been described on occasions as a legitimate form of
execution. That does not however mean that the
judgment creditor has
the same automatic right to it which ordinarily governs execution of
the routine kind.'
[12]
In
Zikalala
v Body Corporate of Selma Court and Another,
[6]
the court said the following concerning the situation where an owner
of a sectional title property is in arrears with the payment
of
levies:
'
Bearing
in mind that sectional title ownership is premised on the notion of a
collective or community ownership, the ultimate sanction
that the
body corporate can resort to in the collection of a debt is to obtain
judgment and pursue the attachment and sale in execution
of the unit.
A precondition for any sale in execution would be a settlement of the
outstanding levies owing to the body corporate
from the proceeds of
the sale. Failing that, transfer of the property would not take place
without a levy clearance certificate
being issued.'
[13]
In casu
,
no case is made out that impeachable
transactions, the concealment of assets, and other irregularities can
be detected, exposed,
and remedied by using the machinery of the
Insolvency Act.
[14]
The applicant failed to make out a case
that sequestration proceedings would benefit itself more than a sale
in execution. Counsel
submitted that it would probably take another
year to obtain an order in terms of rule 46 of the Uniform Rules of
Court. This is
a consequence of the applicant's decision to execute
its judgment debt through a sequestration application.
[15]
The respondents were represented
pro
bono
, and counsel for the respondents
submitted that in these circumstances, there is no justification for
granting a costs order in
their favour.
Order
In the result, the
following order is granted:
1.
The application is dismissed.
E VAN DER SCHYFF
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
PRETORIA
For the
Applicant:
Adv. R
van Schalkwyk
Instructed
by:
KIRCALDY
PEREIRA INC
For the
Respondent:
Adv. H
Marais
Pro bono
at the court’s request
Date
heard:
23
August 2023
Date of
judgment:
28
August 2023
[1]
Bertelsman,
E
et
al
.
Mars: the Law of Insolvency in South Africa, JUTA, 9
th
ed, 134.
[2]
Amod
v Khan
[1947] 2 All SA 370
(N) at 372;
Braithwaite
v Gilbert (Volkskas Bpk Intervening)
[1984] 4 All SA 495 (W).
[3]
1976
(1) SA 19
(C) at 20C.
[4]
1978
(1) SA 1066
(N) 1067.
[5]
Supra,
1069.
[6]
2022
(2) SA 305
(KNP) at para [31].
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